The Merrill-Palmer Institute at
Wayne
State
University is hosting its 22nd annual Metropolitan Detroit Teen Conference on Thursday, Nov. 3, from 8:30 a.m. to 1:45 p.m. in the Student Center Ballroom on the main campus in
Detroit . The conference will host 300 ninth and 10th graders from more than 50 schools and organizations in metro
Detroit .
The Honorable Kym L. Worthy, Wayne County Prosecutor, will be the keynote speaker. Worthy, who became
Wayne
County ’s chief law enforcement officer in 2004, is the first woman and African-American to hold the position.
The theme of this year’s Metro Teen Conference is ‘Take a Giant Step.” The purpose of the conference is to bring metro
Detroit teenagers together from diverse backgrounds to spend the day discovering what they have in common. The diversity is not limited to race, but also includes economic background, inner-city, suburban and those from public and private schools. The students will be put in small groups of six to eight people for topical discussions.
The discussion groups, led by trained adult facilitators, help the teens discover their commonalties and focus on positive goals while reinforcing in their own minds that they are empowered to make positive personal choices in their everyday lives.
Founded by the late Mary-Agnes Davis, the Metro Teen conference is designed to help teenagers understand they can make choices in life and provide teens from diverse backgrounds an opportunity to share, learn and understand different points of view.